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A Choral Timeline: Guillaume Dufay (1400-74)

Dufay
LISTEN: Ave maris stella (c.1430)
(A Hymn to the Virgin Mary)

One of the foremost European composers of his day, the Franco-Flemish singer Guillaume Dufay was renowned as a teacher of others as well as a musician in his own right, and may have written this piece while employed as a member of the papal choir in Rome. 

It is based on, and embellishes, the ancient Latin plainsong hymn Ave maris stella (a song in praise of the Virgin Mary). Plainsong - one of the earliest forms of Western church music - consists of a single vocal line, sung unaccompanied and in free rhythm. In Dufay's setting, the traditional plainsong is preserved in its original form for the odd-numbered verses of the hymn, but for the even-numbered ones Dufay gives the free-flowing notes of plainsong melody a swinging triple-time rhythm and adds two voices, sounding beneath it, which dance around in lively accompaniment.

Dufay controlled and styled all the different parts of his music perfectly, making the end result flowing and melodic. He also made the writing of 4-voice sacred pieces (as opposed to 3-part) more accepted, and later in life developed a unique harmonic style which would mark a huge change in future music.

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